
New Books in Economics Alice Wiemers, "Village Work: Development and Rural Statecraft in Twentieth-Century Ghana" (Ohio UP, 2021)
Feb 28, 2026
Alice Wiemers, associate professor of history at Davidson College and author of Village Work, explores rural statecraft in twentieth-century Ghana. She traces everyday labor and built spaces in Pasenpe. She examines how chiefs, family networks, and shifting policies reframed communal labor as development. She rethinks the hinterland’s role in shaping long-term governance.
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Peripheral Places Became Development Focal Points
- Developers repeatedly treated Northern Ghana as a persistent "space of development," making peripheral regions central to development practice.
- Alice Wiemers traced this by following archival records and development practitioners in Tamale and the district capital Waliwali, which flagged Pasenpe repeatedly.
Every Street and Building Encodes Development History
- Mundane built features—the road, clinic, and school—carry deep histories of labor and statecraft in Pasenpe.
- Wiemers used walking the town and identifying old buildings to reveal layered histories like the colonial courthouse turned school.
The Village As A Cheap Administrative Technology
- The "village" functions as an interchangeable administrative technology that simplifies statecraft for policymakers.
- Wiemers shows how developers treat villages as generic units, producing a gap between policy imaginaries and Pasenpe's particular social dynamics.

